70 S.W.2d 967 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1934
Affirming.
By an ordinance approved February 18, 1931, the common council of the city of Bowling Green amended section 213, subsection 53, of the 1929 Bowling Green City Code, so as to read as follows:
*13"To operate a cleaning and dyeing plant, or either, of clothes and other materials, $25.00.
"To engage in or solicit the business of cleaning and dyeing, or either, of clothes or other materials without the operation of a plant in the city, $200.00."
W.M. Williams brought this suit to enjoin the enforcement of the ordinance on the ground that it is discriminatory, and does not specify the purpose for which the tax is levied. The stipulated facts are: There are persons operating cleaning and dyeing plants in Bowling Green who pay a license tax of $25. Williams does not operate a plant in the city, but has contracted with a dry cleaning establishment located outside the city to do the work for him. He solicits and obtains business from citizens and residents of the city, assembles the clothes and other materials at a store which he has rented for the purpose, transports them in his own vehicle to a plant at Nashville, Tenn., where the dry cleaning work is done, and then delivers them to his customers. For engaging in this business he is required to pay a license tax of $200. From a judgment upholding the validity of the tax, and dismissing the petition, Williams appeals.
There is no provision of our Constitution that fixes a different standard from that prescribed by the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. Under sections 181 and 181a of the Constitution the General Assembly may by general laws only provide for the payment of license fees on franchises, trades, occupations, and professions for state purposes, and may also by general laws delegate the power to municipal corporations to impose and collect the same kind of taxes for municipal purposes, and the power thus delegated is as broad and far-reaching as when exercised by general laws for state purposes. From the very beginning we have upheld the power of the General Assembly and all municipalities, not only to classify different trades and occupations for taxation purposes, but to subdivide the classes into particular classes, if made according to natural and well-recognized lines of distinction. Hager v. Walker,
"But there is an evident difference, in the mode of doing business between the local tradesman and the itinerant dealer, and we are unable to say that the distinction made between them for purposes of taxation is arbitrarily made. In such matters the states necessarily enjoy a wide range of discretion, and it would require a clear case to justify the courts in striking down a law that is uniformily applicable to all persons pursuing a given occupation, on the ground that persons engaged in other occupations more or less like it ought to be similarly taxed."
In Rast v. Van Deman Lewis Co.,
Appellant presses the point that after all he and the operators of local plants are engaged in precisely the same kind of business, that of cleaning and dyeing. But is that true? Those who operate plants in the city actually do the work of cleaning and dyeing. Appellant owns no plant and the work of cleaning and dyeing is not done by him, but by another. His work consists solely of soliciting, assembling the clothing and other materials at his office, transporting them to the plant at Nashville, where the work is done, and then delivering them to his customers. The difference between the two classes of work is not one of mere degree. In the essentials of the occupation there is a difference in method, if not in kind. Surely if the difference between a business using coupons and one not using them, or the difference between selling sewing machines at established places of business, and selling them by means of wagons, or the difference between a hand laundry and a steam laundry, is sufficient to sustain a different occupation tax, no sound reason is perceived why the difference between the actual business of cleaning and dyeing in a local plant and the business of soliciting trade *16 and having the real work done by another outside the city is not likewise sufficient. We are therefore constrained to hold that the classification made by the ordinance is not arbitrary and unreasonable.
The ordinance is also attacked on the ground that it does not specify the purpose for which the tax was levied as required by section 180 of the Constitution and section 3290-12, subsection 12, Kentucky Statutes. Such is the requirement of the Constitution and the statute, and a failure to comply therewith renders the levy void. City of Somerset v. Somerset Banking Company,
Judgment affirmed.